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The Impact of Constructivism on Education: Language ...

Volume 5, Issue 3, Spring 2002. The Impact of Constructivism on Education: Language , Discourse, and Meaning M. Gail Jones Laura Brader-Araje School of Education University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill M. Gail Jones ( , North Carolina State University) is an Associate Professor in the School of Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Laura Brader-Araje is a doctoral student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is currently on parenthood leave. She is a mathematics educator. Printer-friendly PDF version Constructivism has emerged as one of the greatest influences on the practice of education in the last twenty- five years. Teachers have embraced constructivist-based pedagogy with an enthusiasm that is rare in these days of quick fixes and a shopping mall approach to school improvement (Powell, Farrar & Cohen, 1985).

that students do not enter instruction as blank slates, but instead possess a variety of pre-conceptions tied to prior experiences that teachers must take into account during curriculum planning and instruction. Student preconceptions, or naïve conceptions, have been shown to be very resistant to change (Driver, 1989; Osborne & Freyberg, 1985).

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Transcription of The Impact of Constructivism on Education: Language ...

1 Volume 5, Issue 3, Spring 2002. The Impact of Constructivism on Education: Language , Discourse, and Meaning M. Gail Jones Laura Brader-Araje School of Education University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill M. Gail Jones ( , North Carolina State University) is an Associate Professor in the School of Education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Laura Brader-Araje is a doctoral student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is currently on parenthood leave. She is a mathematics educator. Printer-friendly PDF version Constructivism has emerged as one of the greatest influences on the practice of education in the last twenty- five years. Teachers have embraced constructivist-based pedagogy with an enthusiasm that is rare in these days of quick fixes and a shopping mall approach to school improvement (Powell, Farrar & Cohen, 1985).

2 For many teachers, the focus on constructing meaning in the teaching-learning process resonates with prior beliefs because constructivist-based instruction firmly places educational priorities on students' learning. copyright 2000, 2001, ACJ. Constructivism in Education The recent interest in Constructivism in education follows an almost religious dedication to behaviorist pedagogy by administrators and educational psychologists in the United States (Duit & Treagust, 1998;. Jenkins, 2000). Constructivism 's success may be due in part to the frustrations that educators experienced with behaviorist educational practices. Beginning in the 1960s, behaviorism swept from the arena of psychology into education with an air of authority that was startling.

3 Schooling became structured around the premise that if teachers provided the correct stimuli, then students would not only learn, but their learning could be measured through observations of student behaviors. The behaviorist movement led to a long series of strategies for schools such as management by objective, outcome-based education, and teacher performance evaluation systems. Behaviorism in schools placed the responsibility for learning directly on the shoulders of teachers. Teachers were led to believe that if learning was not occurring, then it was their responsibility to restructure the environment, determine the most appropriate reinforcement to promote the desired student behavior, or provide a negative reinforcement to extinguish unwanted behaviors.

4 After years of implementation, behaviorism fell short of producing positive effects within the complex context of the classroom and left teachers feeling shortchanged and cheated by a system that placed the guilt for students' failure to learn in their hands. We experienced the Impact of behaviorism while working as teachers in public schools when all teachers were required to participate in two behaviorist-based programs: Effective Teacher Training and the Teacher Performance Appraisal System. The first program was a series of behaviors that teachers were expected to perform in the classroom. Although the Effective Teacher Training program was based on research of effective practices ( wait time of at least 4 seconds between asking questions during class discussions raises achievement), the program failed to take into account the complexity of student cognition and the dynamics of modern classrooms.

5 The Teacher Performance Appraisal System was an evaluation system that principals used to evaluate teachers. A. principal would observe a teacher during instruction while checking off a series of behaviors that demonstrated effective teaching ( teacher movement around the room). Like Effective Teacher Training, the teacher evaluation program was based on discrete studies of effective teaching practices, but the sum of the behaviors did not necessarily make one a good teacher. It became commonly known that a teacher could exhibit the desired behaviors, get good ratings on the instrument and the corresponding positive evaluation by the principal, but not necessarily teach a lesson where students would develop meaningful understandings.

6 Teachers knew that the programs failed to explain why students weren't learning and why instruction wasn't effective. Following the legacy of behaviorism, Constructivism has been welcomed as a theory of knowing that more fully explains the complexity of the teaching-learning process. Defining Constructivism The meaning of Constructivism varies according to one's perspective and position. Within educational contexts there are philosophical meanings of Constructivism , as well as personal Constructivism as described by Piaget (1967), social Constructivism outlined by Vygtosky (1978), radical Constructivism advocated by von Glasersfeld (1995), constructivist epistemologies, and educational Constructivism (Mathews, 1998).

7 Social Constructivism and educational Constructivism (including theories of learning and pedagogy) have had the greatest Impact on instruction and curriculum design because they seem to be the most conducive to integration into current educational approaches. Table 1 shows the variation of definitions for Constructivism in education. Table 1. Defining Contructivism _____. (The mind can) "put together those ideas it has, and make new complex ones." (Lock, 1947, p. 65). "It is assumed that learners have to construct their own knowledge-- individually and collectively. Each learner has a tool kit of concepts and skills with which he or she must construct knowledge to solve problems presented by the environment.

8 The role of the community-- other learners and teacher-- is to provide the setting, pose the challenges, and offer the support that will encourage mathematical construction." (Davis, Maher, Noddings, 1990, p. 3). " Constructivism is not a theory about teaching it is a theory about knowledge and learning the theory defines knowledge as temporary, developmental, socially and culturally mediated, and thus, non- objective." (Brooks & Brooks, 1993, p. vii). "(K)nowledge, no matter how it be defined, is in the heads of persons, and that the thinking subject has no alternative but to construct what he or she knows on the basis of his or her own experience." (von Glasersfeld, 1995). "The doctrine itself holds that ' Language users must individually construct the meaning of words, phrases, sentences and texts.

9 '" (Suchting, 1998, p. 61-62; von Glasersfeld, 1989, p. 132). "Constructivists allege that it is we who constitute or construct, on the basis of our theorizing or experience, the allegedly unobservable items postulated in our theories." (Nola, 1998, p. 32). "The central principles of this approach are that learners can only make sense of new situations in terms of their existing understanding. Learning involves an active process in which learners construct meaning by linking new ideas with their existing knowledge." (Naylor & Keogh, 1999, ). "(C)onstructivists of different persuasion (hold a) commitment to the idea that the development of understanding requires active engagement on the part of the learner.

10 " (Jenkins, 2000, ). _____. One of the common threads of Constructivism that runs across all these definitions is the idea that development of understanding requires the learner actively engage in meaning-making. In contrast to behaviorism, constructivists argue that "knowledge is not passively received but built up by the cognizing subject" (Von Glasersfeld, 1995). Thus, constructivists shift the focus from knowledge as a product to knowing as a process. Within constructivist theory, knowledge isn't something that exists outside of the learner. According to Tobin and Tippins (1993), Constructivism is a form of realism where reality can only be known in a personal and subjective way. Von Glasersfeld notes that constructivist theory acknowledges reality but he goes on to say, "I define to exist only within the realm of our experiential world and not ontologically ".